Morgan Stanley filed for Bitcoin and Solana exchange-traded funds, marking its first foray into the popular corner of the funds world two years after the explosion of crypto-focused ETFs in the US brought them into the mainstream.
The firm on Tuesday submitted paperwork for a Bitcoin Trust and a Solana Trust, each of which would hold the individual cryptocurrencies. The Solana product would allocate a portion to be staked, a process in which rewards are earned for allowing the tokens owned to be used to support the blockchain network. The trusts would be sponsored by Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc., the filings say.
The filing comes as Wall Street’s traditional players deepen their digital-asset footprint. Firms including Goldman Sachs Group, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Citigroup have stepped up institutional crypto efforts, rolling out trading operations and piloting custody, settlement and tokenisation initiatives. More than $150 billion is already parked across some 130 US funds, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Much of that haul is in Bitcoin-specific products, many of which launched in January 2024 with great immediate success.
ADVERTISEMENT
CONTINUE READING BELOW
“Crypto is becoming too big to miss for issuers, especially those who have in-house advisers,” said Todd Sohn, a senior ETF strategist at Strategas Securities. “This is yet another milestone embracement, similar to Vanguard allowing crypto ETF trading and BofA allowing for a small allocation. It’s rare a new asset class comes into the ETF space, hence the further embracement by large institutions.”
Already, more than 10 pure Bitcoin-focused funds trade in the US, as do various ones based on Solana, the sixth-largest digital currency by market value. Though Bitcoin funds, such as BlackRock’s IBIT, have attracted billions of dollars, many of the more niche products based on lesser-known tokens have struggled to take in meaningful amounts of cash.
ADVERTISEMENT:
CONTINUE READING BELOW
Morgan Stanley currently doesn’t crack the top-10 list of ETF issuers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence, and commands fewer assets in the space than newcomers such as Neos Investments, which got its start in 2022. Morgan Stanley’s existing funds largely focus on fixed income and equities.
Still, the bank has shown greater interest in the crypto sector of late. Bloomberg News reported in September that Morgan Stanley partnered with a cryptocurrency infrastructure provider to let its E*Trade clients trade popular tokens beginning in 2026 and that it had plans to launch an asset-allocation strategy around crypto. It was also evaluating broader uses for tokenisation.
© 2026 Bloomberg
Follow Moneyweb’s in-depth finance and business news on WhatsApp here.
